
Originally Posted by
DannyInvincible
Northern Irish identity is a British identity, though. Recipe for segregation or not, this is the legal fact of the matter.
In furtherance of this point, seeing as Owen was keen to raise the idea of "participation in all Northern Ireland's teams, institutions and the Northern Irish identity itself", and to use an example I feel to be more indicative than anecdotal, check out the nationality requirements for any Northern Ireland civil service position. The job specification will usually feature something along the lines of the following:
Applicants must be either:
(i) A UK national; or
(ii) A Commonwealth citizen; or
(iii) A British Protected Person; or
(iv) An EEA national; or
(v) A Swiss National; or
(vi) A person who is not an EEA or Swiss national, but is a family member of
an EEA national who has moved to the UK from another EEA Member
State for an approved purpose.
As is patently obvious, UK citizenship is accorded primacy. There is no specific mention given to Irish citizenship despite it supposedly being part and parcel of Northern Irish life and identity, or whatever Polley is trying to claim. Irish citizenship, rather, falls under category (iv). You might find something like this, then, in the annex:
'EEA National' means a national of one of the following countries:
Austria France Liechtenstein Romania
Belgium Germany Lithuania Slovakia
Bulgaria Greece Luxembourg Slovenia
Cyprus Hungary Malta Spain
Czech Republic Iceland Netherlands Sweden
Denmark Ireland Norway United Kingdom
Estonia Italy Poland
Finland Latvia Portugal
Clearly then, Irish nationality is not viewed in anyway as being the local nationality of Northern Ireland, or however one wants to put it. It is set on the same pedestal as the nationalities of all European Economic Area member states. This would signify that it is "the exclusive preserve of the Republic", at least in an official capacity. It is set on the same pedestal as, say, French nationality, which is the exclusive preserve of France. We all know this perfectly well anyway, as does Owen Polley (MA in Codology). Irish nationality is channelled through the Irish state; not through the UK state. Likewise, there's no office in Belfast handing out Irish passports to the best of my knowledge. Surely that is, once again, indicative of Irish nationality being viewed as a "foreign" one.
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